Travel Hacking: Maximizing Credit Cards and Points
Travel Hacking: Maximizing Credit Cards and Points
How to Start Traveling for Almost Free — Even If You’re a Total Beginner
By Jeremy Slough | Immeasurable Journeys
What Is Travel Hacking?
Travel hacking is the strategy of using airline miles, credit card points, and loyalty programs to dramatically reduce the cost of travel. Instead of earning miles from flying, you earn the majority of them from credit card welcome bonuses, smart spending, and bonus categories.
When you understand how points work, you can book flights that cost hundreds—or even thousands—of dollars—for a fraction of the price. Most people think it’s complicated, but the truth is:
If you can use a credit card, you can travel hack.
Travel hacking gives you:
More flexibility
Access to better flights and cabins
The ability to take trips you wouldn’t normally pay cash for
A long-term strategy to travel almost free year after year
And once you learn the basics, the system works for you forever.
How Miles Are Actually Earned
Most miles don’t come from flying. They come from credit cards and everyday purchases. Here’s how:
1. Credit Card Welcome Bonuses
This is the fastest and most powerful way to earn miles.
Banks offer 50,000–100,000+ points for meeting a required minimum spend.
A single bonus can sometimes cover an entire international trip.
2. Everyday Spending
Every time you use your card, you earn points.
Groceries, gas, dining, travel, subscriptions, school expenses—everything you’re already paying for can help you travel.
3. Category Multipliers
Some cards give:
3–4x points on dining
2–3x on travel
4x on groceries
5x on certain categories or portals
This accelerates your earning without spending anything extra.
4. Hotel & Airline Loyalty Programs
When you stay at major hotel chains or fly with partner airlines, points stack on top of your credit card earnings.
This becomes especially valuable once you start traveling more frequently.
The Best Beginner Cards
These three cards are the perfect foundation. They’re easy to use, high value, and flexible.
1. Chase Sapphire Preferred (CSP)
Usually offers 60,000+ bonus points
Points transfer to airlines such as United, Air Canada, British Airways, Emirates, and more
2x on travel
3x on dining
Low annual fee
Best for: Beginners who want maximum value with the easiest learning curve.
2. American Express Gold Card
60,000–75,000+ point welcome bonus
4x points at restaurants
4x points at U.S. supermarkets (up to annual limit)
3x on flights
Best for: People who spend a lot on groceries and dining.
3. Capital One Venture Rewards Card
Simple earning: 2x on everything
Easy redemptions for travel
Can transfer points to airline and hotel partners
Best for: Beginners who want a straightforward system with minimal learning curve.
Once you understand how these work, you can expand into more advanced strategies, including premium cards, stacking, and partner sweet spots.
How to Use Points Wisely
Earning points is easy—using them wisely is the real skill.
Here’s how to turn points into maximum-value flights:
1. Understand Award Charts
Every airline has its own pricing system.
Some use fixed charts; others use dynamic pricing.
Knowing the general ranges helps you avoid bad redemptions.
2. Transfer Points to Airline Partners
Chase, Amex, and Capital One all allow you to transfer points to airlines.
This is how you unlock the biggest value.
Examples:
60,000 points → Europe round-trip economy
70,000–90,000 points → Business class to Asia
90,000–120,000 points → Round-the-world flights (multiple segments)
3. Finding Flights With Award Search Tools
Use airline websites or tools like:
Air Canada Aeroplan
United
American AAdvantage
British Airways
Virgin Atlantic
Seats.aero
Point.me (paid)
These help you locate availability quickly.
4. Avoid Poor-Value Redemptions
Never redeem points for:
Gift cards
Statement credits
Cheap domestic cash flights under ~$150
Low-value hotels
Your points should be used for flights where the cash price is high and the mileage cost is low.
My Around-the-World Example
This is a real example of how I’ve used points to fly around the world for almost nothing.
Flights I Booked Using Miles
(Example values—your PDF can include maps/photos)
Los Angeles → Tokyo
Tokyo → Singapore
Singapore → Dubai
Dubai → Paris
Paris → New York
New York → Los Angeles
Exact Miles + Cash I Paid
Total miles used: ~120,000–150,000
Total taxes/fees paid: ~$150–$300
Cash value of these flights: $4,000–$7,000+ depending on the season
How I Pieced It Together
I used a combination of:
Chase transfer partners
Air Canada Aeroplan sweet spots
Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer
A few separate one-way redemptions
I looked for the cheapest award segments and connected the route using partners—NOT cash flights.
How You Can Do Something Similar
You can do a full round-the-world trip by:
Earning a single 60,000–80,000 point bonus
Adding points from a second card
Using Star Alliance or Oneworld partners
Booking one-way awards instead of round-trip flights
Targeting routes where award flights are easiest to find
Once you understand transfers and partner airlines, these kinds of trips become very doable.
Your First 30 Days Checklist
A simple plan to get started immediately:
WEEK 1 — Learn the Basics
Understand what points are
Choose your first credit card
Check upcoming expenses you can use to meet minimum spend
WEEK 2 — Apply & Organize
Apply for your beginner card (or two)
Create a points-tracking spreadsheet or use an app
Set your autopay to avoid interest
Add your card to Apple Pay / Google Pay
WEEK 3 — Start Earning
Shift your daily spending to the new card
Use the correct bonus categories
Track your progress toward the minimum spend
Join the major airline loyalty programs (free)
WEEK 4 — Start Planning a Real Trip
Choose a destination
Look up award prices on partner airlines
Start learning how to search for availability
Set your first goal (example: Europe for 60k, Hawaii for 25k, etc.)
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